Fiction
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Weird Tales
Weird Tales is the classic fantasy and horror magazine, begun in 1923 and continuing till today, which discovered and promoted such classic authors as H.P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard, Ray Bradbury, and many more. It continues with new issues, featuring some of the greatest modern fantasists. Wildside Press is making select issues available through Magzter for new generations to discover and enjoy.
Weirdbook
Weirdbook—originally started in the 1960s by W. Paul Ganley—became one of the most celebrated small press magazines devoted to fantasy, horror, and macabre fiction. Contributors included Stephen King, Brian Lumley, H. Warner Munn, Joseph Payne Brennan, and many more…a virtual “Who’s Who” of the fantastic.
Now Weirdbook has returned under the editorship of Douglas Draa with its first new issue in nearly 20 years, with a stellar lineup of contributions from authors new and old. Here are:
Chivaine, by John R. Fultz
Give Me the Daggers, by Adrian Cole
The Music of Bleak Entrainment, by Gary A. Braunbeck
Into The Mountains with Mother Old Growth, by Christian Riley
The Grimlorn Under the Mountain, by James Aquilone
Dolls, by Paul Dale Anderson
Gut Punch, by Jason A. Wyckoff
Educational Upgrade, by Bret McCormick
Boxes of Dead Children, by Darrell Schweitzer
The Forgotten, by D.C. Lozar
Coffee with Dad’s Ghost, Jessica Amanda Salmonson
Missed It By That Much, by Gregg Chamberlain
A Clockwork Muse, by Erica Ruppert
The Rookery, by Kurt Newton
Wolf of Hunger, Wolf of Shame, by J. T. Glover
Zucchini Season, by Janet Harriett
The Jewels That Were Their Eyes, by Llanwyre Laish
The Twins, by Kevin Strange
Princess or Warrior?, by S.W. Lauden
White Cat Magazine
White Cat Magazine is the flagship periodical of White Cat Publications. Our goal is to present the very best examples of the genres we represent: dark fiction, sci/fi, fantasy, and mystery/suspense. We are an annual publication publishing short stories, flash fiction, interviews, reviews, and columns for print and digital download.
Womans Weekly Fiction Special
A must for all fiction fans, the monthly Woman’s Weekly Fiction special has built on the popularity of fiction in the main magazine to become a highly respected stand-alone title. Packed with short stories by both newly discovered and big-name authors, it has a growing subscription base, a substantial presence on the newsstand, and is now also available on Kindle.
World Literature Today
Your passport to great reading. Each issue of World Literature Today delivers book reviews, fiction, poetry, interviews, and essays by the best new writers from across the globe. Now in its 90th year of continuous publication, World Literature Today has won dozens of awards including most recently the Apex Award for Excellence and Annual Gold Ink Award.
Wuthering Heights
“First published in 1847, Wuthering Heights is an epic romance of passion and betrayal set in the windy moors of Yorkshire. The story opens with Mr. Lockwood, the tenant of Thrushcross Grange, stuck at Wuthering Heights, on a stormy evening. As the hours roll by, he embarks on a discovery with the help of the housekeeper, Nelly Dean, who narrates to him the history of the two estates and of the people connected to them, with Heathcliff and Catherine taking the centre stage. Heathcliff and Catherine’s tale of passionate but angst-ridden love makes Wuthering Heights one of the most widely loved classics of all time.
Emily Brontë and her family lived in Yorkshire, and this led her to set the book against the backdrop of the wild, bleak moors of Yorkshire. Almost every event in the book takes place here, colouring every page with the author’s nostalgia. The central characters of the novel are said to have been inspired from people in the author’s life, including that of ‘Heathcliff’, who is said to have been inspired by the author’s brother, Branwell Brontë.
The depictions of mental and physical cruelty, abuse, and morality in Wuthering Heights raked up a storm when it was published, with readers being divided about how they felt about the depiction of religious and societal values in However, it went on to become a classic work of Gothic fiction in English literature and continues to intrigue readers with its spellbinding plot and spellbinding characters.
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YuGen
YuGen is a bimonthly magazine under the publication of Artists’ Syndicate. It was founded in January, 2017. It provides a platform for fresh voices in literature, art, photography etc. All rights reserved under Artists’ Syndicate, © 2017